4.4 Article

Safety and efficacy of peripheral nerve stimulation of the occipital nerves for the management of chronic migraine: Long-term results from a randomized, multicenter, double-blinded, controlled study

Journal

CEPHALALGIA
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 344-358

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0333102414543331

Keywords

Peripheral nerve stimulation; occipital nerve; neuromodulation; chronic migraine

Funding

  1. IntraMed
  2. SAGE Publishing
  3. Sun Pharma
  4. Allergan
  5. Oxford University Press
  6. American Academy of Neurology
  7. West Virginia University Foundation
  8. Canadian Headache Society
  9. Healthlogix
  10. Wiley
  11. Universal Meeting Management
  12. WebMD
  13. UptoDate
  14. Oregon Health Science Center
  15. Starr Clinical
  16. Decision Resources
  17. Synergy
  18. Medtronic Neurological
  19. St. Jude Medical
  20. Boston Scientific
  21. AGA
  22. Amgen
  23. Cumberland
  24. ElectroCore
  25. Labrys
  26. Merz
  27. OptiNose
  28. Troy Healthcare
  29. Medtronic
  30. Bioness

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background Recent studies evaluated short-term efficacy and safety of peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS) of the occipital nerves for managing chronic migraine. We present 52-week safety and efficacy results from an open-label extension of a randomized, sham-controlled trial. Methods In this institutional review board-approved, randomized, multicenter, double-blinded study, patients were implanted with a neurostimulation system, randomized to an active or control group for 12 weeks, and received open-label treatment for an additional 40 weeks. Outcomes collected included number of headache days, pain intensity, migraine disability assessment (MIDAS), Zung Pain and Distress (PAD), direct patient reports of headache pain relief, quality of life, satisfaction and adverse events. Statistical tests assessed change from baseline to 52 weeks using paired t-tests. Intent-to-treat (ITT) analyses of all patients (N=157) and analyses of only patients who met criteria for intractable chronic migraine (ICM; N=125) were performed. Results Headache days were significantly reduced by 6.7 (8.4) days in the ITT population (p<0.001) and by 7.7 (+/- 8.7) days in the ICM population (p<0.001). The percentages of patients who achieved a 30% and 50% reduction in headache days and/or pain intensity were 59.5% and 47.8%, respectively. MIDAS and Zung PAD scores were significantly reduced for both populations. Excellent or good headache relief was reported by 65.4% of the ITT population and 67.9% of the ICM population. More than half the patients in both cohorts were satisfied with the headache relief provided by the device. A total of 183 device/procedure-related adverse events occurred during the study, of which 18 (8.6%) required hospitalization and 85 (40.7%) required surgical intervention; 70% of patients experienced an adverse event. Conclusion Our results support the 12-month efficacy of PNS of the occipital nerves for headache pain and disability associated with chronic migraine. More emphasis on adverse event mitigation is needed in future research. Trial registration: Clinical trials.gov (NCT00615342).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available